Vivo T3x 5G Mobile Review

Vivo T3x mobile is for all the online buyers of Vivo who are on the verge of putting their hands on a budget smartphone in India. T2 is a relatively more affordable version of the Vivo T3 (review) model released this year and is not yet included in the mix cell phone section. But as it is always the case with bargains, a few compromises had to sbe made here and there and despite that the car still manages to hold its own in sub-Rs. When it comes to performance and battery life, the 15,000 segment is way ahead. Keep reading to know more.
Best Budget Gaming Smartphone Vivo T3x 5G is a versatile phone whether your intent of buying it for regular using or causal gaming. The phone had an acceptable display and a decent battery life as well; I mean, it looked alright too. The cameras however are sure to be disappointing.
Vivo T3x Design:
Vivo T3x Specification and features a design acquire, right I establish in of cunning double. This year the appearance of Vivo’s mobile phone products has been simpler than before The Celestial Green is very elegant and eye-catching. The variant also hides smudges and fingerprints extremely well, which keeps the phone clean. An incredibly feature internally for increased juice, telephone comprising of a 6,000mAh battery board weighs considerably less than you would believe having a hearing lasting phone connected about around 199g; easy and keep employed in day-to-day long-term use aventures. The flat edges also provide a nice in-hand grip to hold the device.
Vivo T3x Display:
Talking about display, the Vivo T3x sports 6.72-inch FHD+ LCD touchscreen with 120Hz refresh rate, capable of hitting peaks of 1000 nits brightness (HBM), slight bezels around with a centred punch-hole for selfie camera, which is what you would likely find in any other budget smartphone. For the price, you get at least some experience of watching something. The display, though plenty bright (but not AMOLED vibrant), will not pop as much. So long as I was reading in daylight, the screen didn’t bother me at all. The phone is Widevine L1 certified, so you can enjoy FHD for your streaming shows. Sound is workable since mono speaker, but max volume not crisp.
Vivo T3x Camera:
Coming to the optics, Vivo T3x is said to sport a 50MP primary camera with AF and Dual-LED Flash paired with a 2MP depth sensor. These are basic point and shoot cameras, so we see its standing in the performance. While not as sharp and detailed, it still looks good on them. It does tend to tilt towards the warmer side with shots though to make them look a little more appealing. However, photo buffs might complain about the restricted dynamic range of those photos. The shadow areas can be a little iffy, but to be fair that is not the case with this phone. Low light you might not be able to turn it off, because the Cameras only take long exposure images. The results are still very meh. It distorts images and it is in noise makes an overall.
For selfies, the Vivo T3x opts for an 8MP shooter as well and while facial detail is acceptable, skin tones could be a bit more realistic. Also, there is some loss of details here when the face was not included, but edge detection seems to be better than with front camera.
The Moto G64 does a better job of photography than the Vivo phone, and it also gets its other two cameras at the rear; 50 MP sensor Even daylight shots (filter) show why Moto smartphone appears better with dynamic range and detail. Together with T3x colors it is also looking more bright and pretty.
Vivo T3x Performance:
There are up to 8GB of RAM, while the Snapdragon 6 Gen 1 chipset will keep your apps running smoothly (and you can add a microSD card if you’re out of space). This chipset provides excellent but consistent performance for the device across synthetic benchmarks and day-to-day use cases. For those wondering about the benchmarks, the Vivo phone scores 549,494 on AnTuTu while at Geekbench we have scores of 940 in single-core and 2,767 in multicore performance. Now that is a considerably good performing experience compared to most of its sub Rs. 15,000 counterparts.
Vivo T3x Software:
In terms of software, Vivo T3x will run on custom FunTouchOS based on Android 14. The user experience is nothing special – the same as other Vivo smartphone in 2019. You get a ton of pre-installed apps, some third-party including Netflix, Snapchat and Candy Crush to name a few — aside from the ones we’re most likely using anyway, at least they are third-party and thus removable if you want your software experience somewhat cleaner.
But we’re talking about Vivo and the vivo T3x smuggles in a 6,000mAh battery that had one of the best results with almost 24h in our PC Mk endurance test. The battery management was also pretty decent during our YouTube and gaming test. In our battery test, we played a 30-minute FHD+ video at 50 percent brightness and volume, and the battery dropped by just 3 percent.
Conclusion:
In India, the Vivo T3x is priced at Rs. 13,499 for the base model with 4GB RAM while higher-end versions in different configurations are also available including a version with up to 8 GB of RAM. Coming to performance, all the devices are more or less based on what we have seen in our T3x test scores and this Moto smartphone is practically a stock android experience by default.

tamil m
Author: tamil m